Heard On The Hill · 116th Congress
D.C. gets its ‘voting card back’ (well, sort of)
</p> Well, sort of. She’s still can’t say “yea” or “nay” on bills in their final forms.
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</p> Well, sort of. She’s still can’t say “yea” or “nay” on bills in their final forms.
</p> In her first term, her statehood bill got zero co-sponsors. In the next Congress, it got 81 co-sponsors — but ultimately flopped, 153-277, when it came to the floor in 1993.
</p> The ban was lifted in a huge spending bill that included language urging the Capitol Police Board to look the other way when sledders charge up the Hill.
</p> Here’s the entire shutdown week in photos:</p>House Rules Committee Chairman Jim McGovern, D-Mass., poses for a photo before an interview by CQ Roll Call in the Capitol on Monday.
That’s what the friendly bill trackers at POPVOX suggested when this reporter whined on Twitter about the confusion.